Watch The Sound of Music
- G
- 1965
- 2 hr 47 min
-
8.1 (240,393)
The first strains of stirring music pulse as the camera pans over the Austrian Alps. As the music grows in intensity, the camera zooms in on a small figure running up a hill. When Julie Andrews bursts into song with “The hills are alive!” the audience can settle back and know they are in for a classic cinematic treat. Andrews starred as Maria in the 1965 film The Sound of Music, which won an Academy Award for Best Picture. She became known for the role as the sprightly, singing postulant whose curiosity and rambunctious behavior kept getting her into trouble in the convent. The Mother Abbess (Peggy Wood) finally deems it necessary for Maria to try her wings and test her vocation. She sends her to be governess to a set of seven unruly children in a wealthy household. Widowed war-hero Captain von Trapp (Christopher Plummer) runs his home like one of his former ships, and despite the opulence and grandeur of the house, it’s a cold and lonely place until Maria arrives bringing warmth, innocence and music. The story focuses on how she wins first the hearts of the children and then the heart of their icy but secretly tender father. All of this is set against the historical backdrop of the Anschluss -- the Nazi takeover of Austria -- and set to the wonderful music of the songwriting team Rodgers and Hammerstein. The film is filled with memorable musical numbers including “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” sung by oldest daughter Liesl (Charmian Carr) and her young boyfriend Rolfe (Daniel Truhitte); “My Favorite Things,” sung by Maria and the children while a thunderstorm rages outside; and “Do-Re-Mi” sung by Maria and the children in a lengthy sequence when they’re out and about in town and roaming the nearby Austrian mountains. Directed by Robert Wise, the movie was filmed on location in Salzburg, Austria, with settings that become as intricate a part of the film as the characters themselves. It is also based on the real-life von Trapp family, who did indeed escape Austria during the Nazi takeover and eventually settle in the U.S., where they performed as a traveling singing group. The story, however, uses a good bit of creative license in its telling of the family’s story, using history as inspiration for a musical-romantic fantasy. Besides its Best Picture Oscar, The Sound of Music took home four other Oscars for Best Director, Sound, Scoring and Film Editing.